Step 1: What You'll Need:

Step 2: Cut It Out!

Take your time, making sure to get as much of the outside grey off as you can. Keep your lines are straight as possible! It'll make the finished product so much nicer.

Cut around the outside of the house and roof first, and then head back in and do the windows. Be very careful about the panes - one wrong slice and you could sever them. Cut on the outside of the window squares to get as much of the grey to disappear as possible. :)

Step 3: Folding, Part 1.

Leave you paper visible lines up. You'll start your folding on the right hand side. Make sure to crease the folds well with your fingernail.

Fold over the three tabs as shown in the first photo, and then the two tiny tabs on top. Then you'll fold over the end piece, using the crease on the left bottom tab and the end of the roof as your guidelines.

Finally, fold up the bottom piece with tabs on both sides so that you're left with a nice clean line.

Step 4: Folding, Part 2.

Now you're going to be working on the middle of the house.

Fold over the tabs on the piece hanging off the bottom, and then fold the entire piece up. Also fold the two tiny tabs at the very top of the roof.

Now, you'll make the folds for the very front of the building. Using the folded over bottom as a guide, fold in both wings of the house, one at a time, so that you end up with creases as shown in the third picture.

Step 5: Gluing!

You can also use tape, but I think it makes it look a little messy. I did it on some of the prototypes out of sheer laziness. :)

First, fold over the right edge so and fold up the bottom half so you create two walls. Apply glue to the flaps and glue the back of the house into place. Line the edges up as well as you can.

Then, fold over the middle of the house and bring the middle flap up and glue it along the bottom of the house.

It's also good to secure the two top flaps on the back of the house together with a bit of glue.

Once the bottom layer is in place, apply glue to all the flaps that remain on the top, fold the other side of the house down, and press it into place. Then glue on the roof! :D

Step 6: What Your Finished House Will Look Like:

The original creator added a really tiny dining set... but as I am obviously not very good at papercrafts I passed on that. ;)

Feel free to add some swanky inside touches if you want.

Step 7: Attach to Computer and Terrorize the Internets.

Depending on your webcam, your house will look different according on the depth you attach it. Try to attach it so that you get the side windows in clear view. I feel that it looks best that way and feels more like a room. Scotch or masking tape work wonderfully for this. :)

That is so cool!!! I would make one if i had a web cam =/. But when i looked the that link and saw that table that really seals the deal. I wonder if like the things they put on pizza so the lid does not touch it would look to scale inside your webcam-house. (I will post a pic of one of those pizza things)

Great first papercraft Jessy! Hope you don't mind, but after finding some spare blue construction paper I made a few adjustments to your pattern just to make the whole thing seem a bit more....Whovian.